PRESORTED STANDARD PERMIT #3036 WHITE PLAINS NY Vol. VI, No. LII Westchester’s Most Influential Weekly Thursday, December 25, 2014 • $1.00 SURPRISE! FBI AGENT VIOLATED POLICY TO WIRETAP ZHERKA Editorial, Page 4 WWW.WESTCHESTERGUARDIAN.COM Page 2 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Community/GovernmentSection White Plains Councilor Lecuona Offers New View on Suburban-Urbanism By STEPHEN MAYO -A suburban city district devoted to young adults, millennials and (naturally) young families “just starting out?” -Planned and widespread development of affordable housing with an emphasis on mixing of generations? -A main shopping and travelling thoroughfare closed to regular vehicular traffic, re-directed to pedestrian commercial use and enjoyment? Which of these “visions” appeals to you? Which would make you rethink a move up county to more bucolic northern Westchester County or reconsider migration to a larger city like New York City or Boston? All of the above “visions” are just that, for now. In the region, ideas and planning concepts for a rapidly impending future of resource conservation and evolving energy choices are making the rounds of city halls and planning and zoning departments. White Plains continues its prominence as governmental and commercial hub with new upscale and affordable housing construction as retailed in these pages recently. New Rochelle and Mount Vernon continue their gropes at geographic, political and economic relevance. One, with no obvious “place to go” in the county developmental scheme of things sullied as it is by the ongoing penal-coded travails of its longtime mayor. The other, New Rochelle, guided by a promising new development commissioner and steered by a harried city council still vetting another development dream of an underutilized Sound Shore municipal property. But what are the goals? A greater population of upwardly mobile, northern and middle Westchester bound suburbanites? A way-station for newly arrived foreign-born seeking their version of an American Dream? The mayor does not say and a purported Comprehensive Master Plan silently echoes in city hall where it awaits resurrection, following delays by electoral politics and an aborted Forest City Ratner Echo Bay scheme. Those of us living in the several cities and larger towns in Westchester have our own visions of suburban-urban life. In Mount Vernon, originally a bedroom community, the prospects point towards local traditions; creating and recreating strong Continued on page 3 Mission Statement Table of Contents Community/Government Section.............................................2 Community.............................................................................2 Government............................................................................3 Westchester Guardian Opinion..................................................4 Holiday....................................................................................4 Editorial...................................................................................4 Creative Disruption.................................................................6 Travel Section..............................................................................8 Travel.......................................................................................8 Arts/Entertainment Section.....................................................10 Eye on Theatre.......................................................................10 Literature...............................................................................12 Cultural Perspectives.............................................................13 Retail Recon..........................................................................14 Movie Review........................................................................15 Community Notes Section.......................................................16 Calendar................................................................................15 Legal Notices.............................................................................14 neighborhoods with solid housing stock and local, walk-to shopping and services. New Rochelle seems to have an identity crisis, with numerous permutations of its once- storied, now somewhat sullen downtown retail district, despite a growing residential population. For Milagros Lecuona, White Plains Common Councilmember for seven years, however, the path to the future appears much clearer and more certain. “Its all about policies. Where and how far do you want your city to go; to grow and develop?” In an interview this week, Lecuona, an urban planning professional with degrees from the University of Madrid and Columbia University, sketched her view of her city’s future and perhaps a way forward for embattled cities and other areas throughout the region, facing the economic competition of a surging metropolis like New York City and the consequent struggle for relevancy, as places of living and business. Urban renewal is not a simple matter of facilitating the erection of office and housing complexes. “Aim for varied and even conflicting uses. If you are considering our main artery Mamaroneck Avenue for instance, the new challenge is not just to attract stores and shoppers; it involves accommodating people Sam Zherka, Publisher Mary Keon, Acting Editor /Advertising Publication is every Thursday Write to us in confidence at: The Westchester Guardian Post Office Box 8 New Rochelle, NY 10801 Send publicity 3 weeks in advance of your event. Ads due Tuesdays, one week prior to publication date. Letters to the Editor & Press Releases can only be submitted via Email: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Office Hours: 11A-5P M-F 914.216.1674 Cell • 914.576.1481 Office Read us online at: www.WestchesterGuardian.com The Westchester Guardian is a weekly newspaper devoted to the unbiased reporting of events and developments that are newsworthy and significant to readers living in, and/or employed in, Westchester County. The Guardian will strive to report fairly, and objectively, reliable information without favor or compromise. Our first duty will be to the PEOPLE’S RIGHT TO KNOW, by the exposure of truth, without fear or hesitation, no matter where the pursuit may lead, in the finest tradition of FREEDOM OF THE PRESS. The Guardian will cover news and events relevant to residents and businesses all over Westchester County. As a weekly, rather than focusing on the immediacy of delivery more associated with daily journals, we will instead seek to provide the broader, more comprehensive, chronological step-by-step accounting of events, enlightened with analysis, where appropriate. From amongst journalism’s classic key-words: who, what, when, where, why, and how, the why and how will drive our pursuit. We will use our more abundant time, and our resources, to get past the initial ‘spin’ and ‘damage control’ often characteristic of immediate news releases, to reach the very heart of the matter: the truth. We will take our readers to a point of understanding and insight which cannot be obtained elsewhere. To succeed, we must recognize from the outset that bigger is not necessarily better. And, furthermore, we will acknowledge that we cannot be all things to all readers. We must carefully balance the presentation of relevant, hard-hitting, Westchester news and commentary, with features and columns useful in daily living and employment in, and around, the county. We must stay trim and flexible if we are to succeed. THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Page 3 The planner/politician observed that the mayor and planning department were on the right course, and that mixed population/ use projects pending or proposed variously at the former American Red Cross facility on North Broadway, the somewhat bumptious commercial strip on Westchester Avenue and the Westchester Pavilion site were promising developments. She professed a love for “open spaces” in the city and the county, but bemoaned “lost opportunities” at the Main Street pedestrian plaza, including the perils of wind-driven “sprays of water from decorative fountains!” Notably, most of the current development in White Plains has benefited from little or no local Industrial Development Authority (IDA)-type tax breaks and rebates. Since the city does not have an IDA in its own name, it has relied mainly on the Westchester County IDA whenever such “incentives” have been called on. This limited resort to crony-capitalist schemes has saved White Plains the controversy, citizen-taxpayer outrage and disappointment that have plagued for so long the reinvention and rebirth of New Rochelle where private property owner subsidies are more common. The Canary Islands, Spain native commented on regional development and renewal in general and reported a proposal to plan and rebuild the State University of New York, College at Purchase campus to provide multi-generational housing for seniors and students. This revelation and Lecuona’s own ideas for enhancing life in the NYC metroplex were provocative and inspiring. They will encourage rethinking of what southern Westchester might look like to future populations of our cities, towns and villages. Her professional work is focused on education, cultural and health care facilities. She is principal of Lecuona Associates, a design and planning consultancy and teaches a masters urban planning course and at SUNY Empire State College. deemed it dead. He didn’t even bother getting into the specifics of the two year report that studied fracking. He more or less told the press that if the report said it was not a good idea, he was going to go along with it. When asked about why he finally vetoed fracking, Cuomo stated, “not a single person has ever said fracking was great”. That may be a good enough sound bite for the media but does it really answer the question about what makes fracking a questionable practice? Of course making this announcement is all about timing. The price of gasoline is down (largely due to national fracking practices) and most folks are just elated about filling up at under $3.00 a gallon. As usual, Cuomo took advantage of the timing in this instance. COMMUNITY White Plains Councilor Lecuona Offers New View on Suburban-Urbanism Continued from page 2 who are travelling, shopping and seeking entertainment and eating,” she stated. Instead of encouraging or discouraging one type of use or another, sometimes it pays to seek out imaginative outcomes; with the proliferation of bars and cabarets on its main streets, she suggested refashioning a culture where pedestrians would feel welcome and “everyone, visitors and residential neighbors included, would not mind the noise and enthusiasm of crowds.” Such approaches require reflection upon comprehensive plans (in White Plains, a document of several decades vintage) and zoning laws. She acknowledged that the present landscape would need to change to permit such “street life” but felt this was a possible and fitting outcome of the processes of the city planning department and common council. Enclosed malls, much like shopping malls in the more open spaces in the county, are things of the past. She claimed, “Mixed uses are the future. Renovation, reconstruction and even razing of older structures like the Westchester Pavilion (presently slated for redevelopment by Urstadt Biddle Properties), can make way for projects with unique designs and construction to accommodate living, working and retail.” Lecuona noted that such an outcome could befall the oft-derided Galleria Mall, site of considerable commercial distress and criminal activity in the past. Like the “pedestrian artery” offered in the introduction, room can be made for varied utilization of public areas. “We need ‘complete streets,’ ” she said. “Streets are not just for cars; pedestrians, bicyclists, and drivers of autos have their place.” She noted that provision of simple narrow bike lanes stripes is not the answer; too many cities and towns have resorted to quick fixes of painted lanes as “more of a political statement than a recognition of urban life.” A trolley route might be an appropriate complement to closed or limited access White Plains streets. Lecuona’s approach accepts the reality of America’s love affair with the automobile and also the “gift of White Plains geographic centrality and location on unparalleled commuter train lines.” She anticipates necessary redevelopment (facilitated by a gift of $1 million from the Federal government for a planning study) on the dated Metro North tract on the city’s western border. New permutations of mixed zoning also promise better results for the city’s permanent population of 56,000 residents and an additional some 200,000 workers and customers visiting workdays. “We must accommodate light industry and even garage-type and recycling businesses if we are to remain a diverse town, open to all residents and income levels.” She continued, “The new White Plains picture should also reflect our history, the unique contributions of our long-established institutions and businesses and environmental and ecological reality.“ The council member chairs the Sustainable White Plains Committee, where she brings 30 years of experience in architecture and urban planning. Stephen I. Mayo is an attorney, owner of Mayo Linoleum Works, LLC and host of “The Steve Mayo Show” on WVOX radio, 1460 AM; Mondays from 6 to 7 PM with co-host Cornelia Mrose. www.thestevemayoshow.com GOVERNMENT Cuomo Bans Fracking in New York State By NANCY KING This week, just six short weeks after his re-election, Governor Andrew Cuomo banned high volume hydraulic fracturing for shale gas, also known as “fracking” in New York State. Fracking involves injecting water, sand and chemicals at high pressure in hopes that the process will release oil and natural gas. In theory, the process sounds great but there are many questions as to what happens with the leftover water from the drilling along with those questionable chemicals used in the process. No one seems to know what happens with that run-off but New York State Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker believes there are significant health risks when it comes to fracking. Because the fracking process is relatively new, there are no definitive studies that would indicate that contaminated run off water would break down enough to be safely absorbed in the earth. Dr. Zucker went so far as to say that he would not feel comfortable with his own children playing, or living in a community where fracking was taking place. Rural communities throughout New York State were less than thrilled by the Governor’s decision to ban fracking. Economically depressed upstate areas had hoped for the economic boon that fracking has brought to areas of Pennsylvania, Ohio and Texas. Fracking has given those areas jobs, and a form of economic stability that the northern area of our state has been sorely missing. But the dilemma has always been whether a state should sacrifice the health and safety of those who live in the area? Governor Cuomo literally sat on the subject of fracking during his campaign for re-election. Republican challenger Rob Astorino supported fracking for the positive economic impact that it would have brought to our blighted upstate, however when he lost his bid to unseat the Governor, fracking just sort of fell by the wayside. During his re-election campaign, Cuomo artfully dodged any questions concerning fracking but six weeks after his re-election, he has now banned it. Political chess or has Andrew Cuomo suddenly become an environmentalist who wants to protect our water table? More than likely, this was a political move. Governor Cuomo is nobody’s fool and after being re-elected, he knew he had to “make nice” with the WFP after he just about abandoned them in order to establish his “Women’s Equality Line”. The ban on fracking also holds Zephyr Teachout and Tim Wu at bay; after all, even though their campaign failed, they have taken an unwavering stance against fracking. They have continued to lobby against the questionable safety of fracking citing the questionable health and safety ramifications of the process. Nonetheless the Governor has spoken and fracking in New York now becomes a moot issue. Without giving a “real” reason for killing this project, Cuomo just merely Commercial • Industrial & Residential Services Roll-Off Containers 1-30 Yards Home Cleanup Containers Turn-Key Demolition Services DEC Licensed Transfer Station www.citycarting.net City Carting of Westchester Somers Sanitation B & S Carting AAA Paper Recycling Bria Carting City Confidential Shredding DEP Licensed Rail Serve Transfer & Recyling Services Licensed Demolition Contractor Locally Owned & Operated Radio Dispatched Fully Insured - FREE Estimates 800.872.7405 • 203.324.4090 On-Site Document Destruction 8 Viaduct Road, Stamford, CT 06907 Same Day Roll Off Service Page 4 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 WestchesterGuardianOpinion Celebrate Good Will at Christmas fitting the theme that the Savior born is the Light of the World. What does this season of Christian celebration bring to people everywhere? The Christ child came to save the world. The good news is announced as a great joy “for all the people” (Luke 2:10). The practice of giving gifts to relatives and friends during this season, has been extended by some groups and churches, to include giving gifts to the poor, the homeless, and especially to children living in impoverished circumstances. The post office receives thousands of letters each year for Santa Claus. Santa Claus can be traced back as far as the Vikings. The man who became Santa Claus was a Christian saint, to whom the Vikings dedicated a cathedral, in Greenland. But it was the Germans whose love of Christmas was so great it kept toe feast of St. Nicholas alive. John Pintard, who founded the New York Historical Society in 1804, promoted naming St. Nicholas the Patron Saint of the Society and of New York City. Washington Irving joined the New York Historical Society in January 1809 and published the Knickerbocker History of New York, which included numerous references to the “jolly” St. Nicholas. By 1821, a children’s poem attributed to Clement Clark Moore (an Episcopal) had Santa Claus arriving from the North Pole with flying reindeer. The Coca Cola Company popularized our familiar, beloved Santa Claus, wearing a bright red suit through advertisements, during the years 1931 to 1960. The ads show Santa bringing toys and pausing to have a drink of coke. The Salvation Army Santas ringing the bell to collect money for their programs is one example of how many people contribute to worthy causes at Christmas. A child often goes to a department store to ask Santa for the presents he is wishing for, and there is no doubt Santa is an indelible part of Christmas. The joy and good will of the season sets the tone for a wonderful new year.The spirit of Christmas belongs to everyone. Surprise! Agent Violates FBI Policy to Obtain Zherka Wiretap him in jail, without bail for more than three months, pending an appeal to the Second Circuit. There was bad faith on the part of the government from the very start of the investigation into Mr. Zherka’s business affairs. Who had the power and influence to induce an FBI agent to jeopardize his career to obtain authorization for the illegal wiretaps? Did the agent really think this up all by himself or was the agent just puppet: a bit player in a much larger plan, orchestrated by someone else? Who, we wonder, is the puppeteer hiding behind the scenery, hoping not to be discovered? This is not a Merry Christmas for the Guardian family though we wish you and your family a Merry Christmas and belated Happy Chanukah wishes to our Jewish friends. By Peggy Godfrey Throughout November and December, beautiful lights decorate our streets while stores display an assortment of Christmas scenes and menorahs. Christian churches are decorated with crèches, Christmas trees, and special services or masses are scheduled for Christmas day. The good will that permeates the season along with the happiness of many people is evident. A fact of present day life is that the celebration of Christmas has been co-opted by secular interests,particularly through shopping and gatherings of families and friends, all of which do not emphasize the religious reasons for the Christmas season. But all this should not detract from the wonderful fellowship and good will that permeates this season, which offers an opportunity for everyone to extend good will to all, regardless of their religious or secular affiliation. While the practice of religion in this country is diminishing, there is plenty of evidence that about 80% of Americans do consider themselves members of one religious faith or another, even if they do not attend church services. This is reinforced by the history of our nation. The United States’ Declaration of Independence signed July 4, 1776, stated “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, that among there are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” This dedication to a “creator” permeates the country’s history and many immigrants came to this country because they wanted to freely practice their religion. It is no surprise that the Christmas season reflects the nation’s history and the diverse religions that are practiced by generations of Americans. The lack of church attendance does not deter those who cherish the traditions of this holiday season, though many people do take time attend Christmas masses or services or Chanukah services, even if they do not worship formally on a regular basis. Historically, early evidences of the liturgical feast of Christmas can be found in Egypt around 200 A.D. But until the fourth century, the celebration of Christmas was not common. At first, recognition of Christ’s birth was celebrated on January 6th, the Epiphany, a separate feast day. After a while, December 25th was selected and it is still uncertain whether this is the day of Christ’s birth. However, that date has been related to a solstice festival call Natalis Invicti on December 25th. Another interpretation is that the days start to get longer at that time, EDITORIAL False & Misleading Statements Knowingly Used in Sworn Supporting Documents “All truth passes through three stages: First, it is ridiculed, second, it is violently opposed, and third, it is accepted as self-evident.” –Arthur Schoenhauer On Tuesday, Dec. 16th, 2014 our publisher,Sam Zherka and his attorneys returned to court to further discuss the exchange of voluminous discovery documents for his June 1st trial. Much of the information is not indexed for search-ability, making it difficult to locate relevant documents among a mountain range of paper, if in fact critical documents are there at all. In response, Mr. Jacobsen, the Asst. U. S. Attorney stated that he turned over documents in the form they HOLIDAY were received; items that required scanning were not indexed and electronic documents were turned over as such. Judge Cathy Seibel instructed Mr. Jacobsen to turn over the wiretap line sheets noting the topic covered, to the defense. Midway through the proceeding, Fred Haftez, Mr. Zherka’s attorney, stunned those in attendance when he referenced a letter dated December 12, 2014, from the US Attorney’s office stating that the FBI shut down electronic surveillance of Mr. Zherka, alleged to have occurred between April 11, 2006 and July 6, 2006, because a formal inquiry determined that “one of the supplemental The Real Wars on Christmas By Glenn Slaby Why am I crying silently? Why am I hurting and my soul in distress? Why are there so many feeling the same way? Christmas should be celebrated with pure joy. Unlike Easter, which should be celebrated with a pure gloriousness, this Feast of the Nativity creates immense tension mainly because it is a religious feast in a multi-cultural society (so beneficial in many ways) with an economy based on consumerism and capitalism. Multiculturalism creates issues via the fact that a cultural segment inundates/overwhelms me with commercialization to improve their profit margin and I find this difficult to shut out of my life. The history of Christmas as a Holiday, beginning with its root as a rebuttal to an Imperial Roman celebration, is very familiar. affidavits submitted to the court by the case special agent (SA-1) in support of the wiretap applications contained inaccurate statements.” Quoting the letter, Mr. Hafetz told the court, the Department of Justice Office of Professional Responsibility inquiry further concluded that “certain statements regarding a confidential informant made in SA-1, the agent’s supplemental affidavit dated April 7, 2006 and repeated in a supplemental affidavit on June 2, 2006 …were knowingly false and misleading and that by swearing to the statements, SA-1 had violated FBI policy.” Mr. Hafetz is demanding to see the applications and affidavits for the electronic surveillance, allegedly requested on April 7th, 2006. The Asst. U. S. Attorneys have indicated “they would not use information obtained via the tainted warrant in their main case against Mr. Zherka, though they reserve the right to cross-examine him on this information.” Mr. Hafetz pointed out that the questionable legality of the wiretaps raises issues of probable cause. In short, an FBI agent knowingly submitted false and misleading statements to support a wiretap application, violating Mr. Zherka’s rights to privacy and triggering subsequent investigations that have landed Appearing in only two (Matthew and Luke) of the four Gospels, this Feast was celebrated as early as 200 A.D. which is also the time when the Latin Church began observing December 25th, as the birth of Jesus Christ. (The Pocket Catholic Dictionary by John A. Hardon, S.J. Image Books 1985). Though many may not be believers in Jesus Christ as Savior, still, they celebrate and exalt kindness, so badly needed in our world, at Christmas. In his book, The Purpose of Christmas, (Howard Books, 2008) Reverend Rick Warren reiterates that this day as a time for celebration, salvation and reconciliation. We can readily agree that The Birth we celebrate is very much ignored; in my opinion, if we focused instead of the birth of Christ, then the celebration truly becomes one of joy and the trappings of commercialization will become lessor appendixes. (Reminds me of the moral of The Grinch -original, cartoon version – the stolen gifts had no effect on the celebration.) For me, the real joy,The Truth, is difficult to truly comprehend, for it extends and amplifies an event beyond the material/physical component of our world - the unseen; the spiritual manifested in the physical person. Two separate worlds joined together and nothing has ever been the same since! Christ’s physical presence in our world lasted for approximately 33 years - ending in the victory of the first Easter, a miraculous singularity in human history. Today a battle is being fought within our secular culture: material concerns and our busy-ness overwhelm the spiritual, yet when the trappings are diminished or removed, miracles can, and will happen. The profit motive has dissolved the spirituality of the season. Our children are overwhelmed by propaganda for “the next best thing” that will Continued on page 5 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Page 5 which can never touch you, …! That there are no more limitations! ... That you are standing on a threshold of infinite possibilities!” (A Thomas Merton Reader revised edition, ed. Thomas P. McDonnell, Image Books. 1974. Due to my illness, the messed up biochemistry of my brain, I may experience some portion of what the average person can accomplish, but God willing, I may experience it nevertheless. Gift giving should not overwhelm, but support the traditions and other positive aspects of this day: special recipes cooked to perfection (most of the time), desserts of course (always save room for more), hearty and healthy wishes, many hugs & many kisses, greeting cards, family get-togethers (comes with issues) and music (overplayed at times). The trappings of this Holiday are all aimed towards joy. These trappings have evolved and continue to evolve and most of the time that’s a good thing strive to find something deeper that will draw us closer to what’s important - God, faith and family. Tradition is a very important aspect of growth - spiritual, emotional, etc. Christmas is not just one day, but a feast within a special season, ending with the Epiphany – Tuesday, January 6th, 2015. Time from daily chores and work should be made to continue the celebration, visiting relatives, exchanging gifts. But don’t tell the manufacturers – they will tell us to buy more gifts, spend more money and expect presents every day. The battle between religious ministries and secular consumerism is won’t be over any time soon. So what, if non-Christians appropriate and celebrate Christmas as just a holiday without an understanding of the deeper meaning of the day? Out of respect, I will wish them a Happy Holiday! Since then, advocates of personal freedom have grown exponentially, and their voices are louder than ever: not just with each election cycle, but on each day that someone discovers a new YouTube video of a Ron Paul speech or a heated debate where he crushes the establishment puppets that parrot the “parties” talking points. Despite media blackouts during both of his presidential runs, by both the liberal and conservative media who desperately attempted to marginalize him, Ron Paul just grew stronger. But Ron Paul will tell you himself that he is not a leader! Instead, like all great leaders, he is a launching pad for a new generation of leaders who are to taking up the fight to protect our freedoms - - a daunting challenge. Quite often we hear people talk about achieving the American dream: the life that people can create for themselves when there is unbridled opportunity before them…. That’s it: nothing more than opportunity. Opportunity means no barriers. When America earned the title” land of opportunity” it was not a result of it being a “welfare state” - either social welfare or corporate welfare; rather it was a place where people from distant lands were able to come and test their entrepreneurial sea legs. People here are free to “try” and “fail” and try again until they succeed at whatever they focus their sights on. Ultimately, the ‘idea’ of America is a place where those who embrace the challenges of uncertainty can go because this land has unlimited potential. It is the “land of opportunity” because it has the least restrictive barriers on the application of human energy…and as a result leaves room for the individual to prosper. Ron Paul is not a leader who pushes the American dream; he is a leader who pushes the idea of freedom. He pushes the human dream of a world where people live peacefully without the use of force, fraud, violence or coercion; a place where there is not an elite ruling class that is “bought and paid for” by lobbyists and moneyed interests behind the scenes. Ron Paul is a leader, because he has inspired a whole new generation of leaders to become involved in the political process so that it works for everyone. It is time for us to rediscover ourselves, rediscover individual liberty; rediscover personal responsibility and most importantly, it is time to rediscover the ideals that made the young America the beacon of hope for those who are hopeless. Leaders run to fix problems, they don’t run away from problems or leave them for someone else to fix. Leaders inspire others to learn for themselves and then in turn take their newly acquired perspective and through practical application turn it into wisdom based upon experience. Leaders don’t indoctrinate. Leaders inspire and inform. And through their actions and ideas they compel others to act and launch even better ideas that serve to help promote prosperity and positivity in the human condition. Leaders call upon people to embrace a civilized society rather than one built on blind obedience to authority. Only independent free thinkers, who challenge the status quo and the existing paradigms, will save the world from those who hold productive human energy captive to bad ideas for the sake of maintaining political power and influence. Sometimes leaders pay a steep price when they speak out against certain political figures; leaders like Sam Zherka, who has been sitting captive for three months, held hostage in a cage. HOLIDAY The Real Wars on Christmas Continued from page 4 make them happy. Seeking to achieve and maintain joy through the material becomes a trap, a continuous cycle; an addiction! The cult of Materialism, the idea that acquiring things will create peace, joy and happiness, will drag them down for a very long time, in the absence of qualities that do bring inner joy and lasting peace: kindness, love, ethical behavior and the willingness to lend a hand to someone in need, for example. (The art of making money has evolved into even cutting at least one thirty eight second scene from A Charlie Brown Christmas for the sake of adding more commercials. It’s playing a second time for an hour, so maybe this classic will be shown in its entirety. Sacrilege!) Blessed John Paul II wrote, “It is not wrong to want to live better; what is wrong is a style of life which is presumed to be better when it is directed towards ‘having’ rather than ‘being,’ and which wants to have more, not in order to be more but in order to spend life in enjoyment as an end in itself ” (Centesimus Annus, 36, © Copyright 1991 - Libreria Editrice Vat). Joy enhanced due to The One’s Birthday should be celebrated. Presents should not be the goal: presents should be the results of this joy rather than joy resulting from presents. Getting something, i.e., flowers, for just the reason of getting is a wonderful idea. Giving for just the reason of giving is fantastic. Fr. Thomas Merton’s critiques still applies to today, “It is good that somewhere in the world there are men who realize that Christ is born. There were only a few shepherds at the first Bethlehem, and it is the same now. The ox and the ass understood more of the first Christmas than the high priest in Jerusalem. And it is the same today”. Not with our priests today, but with the current leaders of society – politicians, capitalists, socialists, etc. If we take that next step of opening our eyes to something beyond our vision, we may see so much more. What occurred when Thomas Merton made that leap? “The emptiness that had opened out within me, that had been prepared during Advent and laid upon my own silence and darkness, now became filled. And suddenly I was in a new world.” What we think has been lost, leaving a void, creates an expanse for Faith and Truth to enter, creating new freedoms and liberty. The results of such discipline, he continues, “You know that Christ is born within you, infinite liberty (love): that you are free! That there are enemies GOVERNMENT The “Leadership” Illusion By Kurt Colucci The illusion of leadership surrounds us in all aspects of our lives, be it work, government or media. But what is the current state of leadership in America? I will attempt to answer this today. What does it mean to be a “Leader?” According to Wikipedia, Leadership has been described as “a process of social influence in which a person can enlist the aid and support of others in the accomplishment of a common task”. For example, some understand a leader simply as somebody whom people follow, or as somebody who guides or directs others, while others define leadership as “organizing a group of people to achieve a common goal”. Today, the word leadership is grossly misused. I am brought to the brink of despair when I hear people like John Boehner Mitch McConnell, Barack Obama and George Bush referred to as “leaders”. These are men were elected because they had “investors” who allowed them to ‘spend’ money for the purpose of ‘convincing’ a majority of voters that they are “leaders” and as a result, they were elected to positions of leadership. Convincing a majority of people to vote for you does not mean you are a leader. It means you’re a salesman with a good marketing team behind you and the fuel that propels all marketing is money. True leaders do not treat others like playthings to serve a vicious cycle of predatory dominance. Effective leaders inspire others to achieve their optimal potential, exercising their freedom of choice to contribute their abilities to a given cause. It has been nearly 50 years since one of America’s greatest leaders stood proudly on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and passionately proclaimed: and “I have a dream today…” Those words have inspired generations of Americans, uplifting the soul of America and in the process changed the face of this nation forever. It was the final straw; the gauntlet was thrown down in a powerful and peaceful revolution for civil rights through civil disobedience. Dr. King’s ‘I have a Dream Speech” took place long before I was born. Yet, when I look back at the video and listen to his words, I feel a sense of empowerment as I watch a defiant man standing in front of a huge crowd: professing his dream for all the world to hear. Almost half a century ago, we saw a true leader of men put his life on the line to fight for a worthy cause. Contrast this to our current “leaders” who instead tell us “I have a scheme today”! Most of us do not even react to this and when we look back to the civil rights movement of the 60’s we can see just how far we have fallen. Our American social, political and economic systems are broken. We know it. We can feel it. This is no longer a debate; it is a fact that our democracy is in jeopardy due to recklessly flawed leadership. Are there any true leaders out in the mainstream inspiring people to think for themselves? I frequently hear people say: “we need leadership.” But, by saying “we need leadership” what these people are really saying is “I Former Republican Congressman Ron Paul need someone to follow.” This reminds me of the quote by author Tom Peters: “Leaders don’t create followers, they create more leaders.” Individuals who have transformed their societies throughout history have, for better or worse, compelled or inspired people to take action for the sake of achieving a specific goal. How do they do this? Consider Ron Paul. Not so many years ago, he was a lone voice in the political wilderness. A little over a half-decade ago, there were many people like Ron Paul spreading the message of liberty, but Ron Paul, as a presidential candidate, had the most visible platform from which to speak, along with a cogent message: liberty, self-governance and personal choice. What did he do with that opportunity? He has created a wave of momentum since his 2008 presidential run, which ignited a brush fire of passion among the public for the preservation of liberty and constitutional governance. Page 6 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Creative Disruption The Internet --The Promise Or The Peril? By John F. McMullen As we turned the corner into the 21st Century, those publishing companies, such as John Wiley, & Sons, Que, and O’Reilly, which specialize in telling us how to work new hardware and software products, had their act pretty well down. They had developed rather involved templates for each type of product into which authors could plug in the information about the new entry. Hence, these books could reach market in a very short time, unlike my first book which took over a year, and be relevant to purchasers of the new Kindle, Nook, iPhone, Android tablet, etc. The area that became the battleground in this century has been the rather more interesting “what does this all mean?” – after all, if you can’t ascertain how to use your fifth Kindle, should you still be buying them? (it may be good to have the book for your most current purchase but is it really “I couldn’t put it down” reading?). The “what does it all mean” question has opened a literary battleground between those who think that the Internet (with its stepchildren Google and Social Media) will provide us with a world of peaceful prosperity (at least if we manage it as that particular person wishes us to) and those who feel that the brave new world in which we are being ushered into to is one in which we will be digital serfs with little freedom and no privacy. To be fair, there are those authors who feel that we may make choices that will determine our individual fates and those of the world in general -- but most of the authors persuasively argue for either heaven or hell. Nicholas Carr is one of the best known writers of cautionary tales about the Internet with “The Shallows: What The Internet Is Doing To Our Brains” (2010) and “The Glass Cage: Automation and Us” (2014) and, while he writes very well and with verve, it strikes me that he is constantly finding reasons to say “Whoa, Nellie” about technology without looking at the positives on the other side of the coin. For example, he begins a section in the Shallows on memory by quoting Wired writer Clive Thompson as writing “I’ve almost given up making an effort to remember anything because I can instantly retrieve the information online” and David Brooks, New York Times columnist, who wrote “I had thought that the magic of the information age was that it allowed us to know more but then I realized the magic of the information age is that it allows us to know less. It provides us with external cognitive servants – silicon memory systems, collaborative filters, consumer preference algorithms and networked knowledge. We can burden these servants and liberate ourselves.” Sounds good, huh? Not to Carr, who quotes Augustine as calling memory “a vast and infinite profundity” and William James “The art of remembering is the art of thinking;” in other words, the Internet is eroding our ability to think! He then brings in studies by Eric Kandel and others that show that our brains have a plasticity that lets them adapt to new requirements and that we are giving up very important brain functions because of the Internet. To John Naughton in his “From Gutenberg to Zuckerberg: Disruptive Innovation in the Age of the Internet” (2012), the plasticity of the brain is a fact but the changes due to the Internet are simply another positive step along the path of evolution. He traces this evolution back to the changes that were made necessary by the advent of the printing press and points to the work of neuroscientist Maryanne Wolf (author of the 2007 “Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain”) who pointed out that human beings invented reading only a few thousand years ago and that this invention actually changed the way we are organized, which in turn altered the way our species evolved. So we have two bright, credentialed, and articulate authors taking the same facts and arriving at two different conclusions – an interesting sidelight here is that Clive Thompson, whose quote led us into Carr’s negative conclusion on memory is the author of “Smarter Than You Think: How Technology Is Changing Our Minds For The Better” (2013). Perhaps the severest critic of our ongoing movement to Internet reliance is Evgeny Morozov, author of “The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom” (2011) and “To Save Everything, Click Here: The Folly of Technological Solutionalism” (2013). Morozov sees the trend toward bringing the “smart technologies” available on the Internet to bear on the “Big Data” now available on the Internet as “solutionism”, a pejorative term that he borrows “from the world of architecture and urban planning, where it has come to refer to an unhealthy preoccupation with sexy, monumental, and narrow-minded solutions – the kind of stuff that wows audiences at TED Conferences – to problems that are extremely complex, fluid, and contentions.” He sees the Internet as the enabler of such a tendency, writing “The Internet has allowed solutionists to significantly expand the scope of their interventions, running experiments on a much grander scale. It has also given rise to a new set of beliefs – what I call ‘Internet-centrism’ – the chief of which is that we are living through unique, revolutionary times, in which the previous truths no longer hold, everything is undergoing profound change, and the need to ‘fix things’ runs as high as ever.” The whole constantly expanding inventory of books related to the on-going changes that the technology is making in our lives is merely a reflection of the greater society attempting to deal with these changes. There are great positives being brought on by technology yet we must look at the real and potential attendant negatives and try to mitigate them – and reading as much of the literature as possible can only help us to understand the benefits and challenges. Science writer Charles Seife, in his 2014 “Virtual Unreality: Just Because The Internet Told You, How Do You Know It’s True?” shows the reader how critical he/ she must be in accepting information gleaned on-line while Patrick Tucker in “The Naked Future: What Happens In A World That Anticipates Your Every Move?” (2014) explores both the promise and pitfalls of Big Data and predictive analysis (“Predictive Analysis: The Power To Predict Who Will Click, Buy, Lie, or Die (2013) by Eric Siegel and Pam Baker’s 2014 “Data Divination: Big Data Strategies” take us deeper into these areas). Then we have books that are generally Internet-positive but feel that we must take certain steps to insure that we do not become the victims of the technology. Four of the more interesting are Ethan Zuckerman’s “Digital Cosmopolitans: Why We Think The Internet Connects Us, Why It Doesn’t, and How To Resolve It” (2013), “The End of Big: How The Internet Makes David The New Goliath” by Nicco Mele (2013 – I particularly FLEETWOOD THE ROMA BUILDING RENOVATED APARTMENTS FOR RENT Prime Yorktown Location Beautiful, Newly Renovated Apartments COMMERICAL SPACE FOR RENT Great Visibility • Centrally Located STORE 950 Sq. Ft. Rent: $3250 /Month OFFICE SPACE: 470 Sq. Ft. Rent $850/Month • 1160 Sq. Ft. 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One has only to look at another complex field, economics, and consider the writings of two very bright and well-written pundits of very differing opinions, Paul Krugman and Thomas Sowell. The one thing that all of the writers mentioned above agree on is that “the more we know, the better we will be able to cope with the challenges we face.” changers normally happen under our personal radar until we find that the world as we knew it is no more. He then offers suggestions for activities that will “take us off the grid” (not his term) and concludes with a great quote from former President Dwight D. Eisenhower – “If you want total security, go to prison. There you’re fed, clothed, given medical care and so on. The only thing lacking … is freedom.” The column is well written and, hopefully, will cause readers who haven’t been concerned with these issues to wake up and determine whether they wish such a country. Luke Hamilton’s column, “Social Media” The Shiny New Weapon of Progressives,” is another story. He sets up a straw horse – that Liberals have the ability in Twitter and Facebook to bombard users with messages aimed at “forcing progress on the unenlightened.” We can really stop right there -- in neither Facebook nor Twitter, can anyone bombard anyone with messages, if those users don’t choose to be bombarded. In Facebook, the user chooses “Friends” (the chosen friend must approve the “friendship”) and he / she will only see postings from those friends. If she or he feels that the friend is bombarding her / him with unwanted liberal or conservative nonsense, it is a simple task to “unfriend” the bombarder. In Twitter, the process is a little different, one reads the “Tweets” of people that she / he has chosen to “follow” (unlike Facebook, the “followed” does not have to approve the “following”). Once again, someone bombarded only has to stop following the bombarder. On Twitter, one can also read postings on particular subjects by following “hashtags.” These # are subjects put onto tweets using the “#” – so there might be a subject #conservativegop (there is) and those who selected that hashtag would see every tweet which had that hashtag embedded. Once again, any person who felt overwhelmed by such material could just stop receiving those tweets. It is also good to realize that Facebook has one billion users (not all of them active) and, with that many persons there are bound to be many, many political views. Another way to receive information (to see postings on the user’s “timeline” co-mingled with those from friends) is to join Facebook “groups.” There are many Conservative groups on Facebook, just as there are on just about any topic that might be imagined – to list just a few: Conservative Daily -- 6,575,031 likes -- https://www.facebook.com/ iamconservative with the cover page “American and Proud” Conservative Coalition Against Liberal Agenda – C.C.A.L.A -- https://www. facebook.com/conservativecoalition. againstliberalagenda Conservative Post -- 556,724 likes -- https://www.facebook.com/ heyconservativepost . Reason Magazine -- 228,117 likes -https://www.facebook.com/Reason. Magazine (I “follow it”) National Review -- 179,919 likes -- https://www.facebook.com/ nationalreview (I “follow it”) The Cato Institute -- 243,404 likes -- https://www.facebook.com/ CatoInstitute (I “follow it”) The Facebook user is free to join or leave any of these groups so, once again, I don’t see how anyone can be “bombarded” without her/his acquiescence. As far as the “unenlightened” to whom Hamilton refers, they are probably not using Social Media for any political purpose but rather to discuss movies, personalities, friends, enemies, sex, and other topics. Hamilton asks “Have you ever imagined Joseph Goebbel’s Twitter account? Or Leni Riefenstahl’s You Tube channel? Imagine the perverse delight that they would take in finding a facile vehicle for propaganda so astonishingly popular with the teeming masses.” Another whoa! There are Nazi and Anarchist groups, hashtags, and websites out there now. The leaders may be full of racism, bluster, and craziness but we see little following by the “teeming masses.” In addition to the misunderstandings Creative Disruption The Internet --The Promise Or The Peril? recommend this book for its balance), “technocreep: The Surrender Of Privacy And The Capitalization Of Intimacy” (2014) by Thomas P. Keenan, and Astra Taylor’s “The People’s Platform: Taking Back Power And Culture In The Digital Age” (2014). Each presents a problem with the current state of the technology and posits corrective action. Just a browsing of these few titles (and there are many many more) may be confusing; how can so much, often conflicting, material be written about a technology that most of us use every day – e-Mail, Facebook, Twitter, Google, Amazon and Best Buy purchases – without much thought. It’s all very easy, right? – and that is the problem. Under the shell of this very easy, user-friendly technology is a ravenous beast that is changing everything Comments on this column to johnmac13@ gmail.com Creative Disruption is a continuing series examining the impact of constantly accelerating technology on the world around us. These John F. McMullen is a writer, poet, college professor and radio host. Links to other writings, Podcasts, & Radio Broadcasts at www.johnmac13.com, his books are available on Amazon, and he blogs at http://open.salon. com/blog/johnmac13. © 2014 John F. McMullen Creative Disruption Ideological Views of Technology by John F. McMullen There have throughout the last 300 years been many, many books, articles, and movies warning us about uses and misuses of present or future technology. Many are based on a concern that the mythical (or real) “state” will use technology to watch us constantly and control us in some way – among the more famous are George Orwell’s “1984,” Ray Bradbury’s “Fahrenheit 451,” Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World” and the “Matrix” and “Total Recall” movies. Each of these portrays a world in which the government or some insidious group has used some form of technology not yet available to the populations’ collective mindset or bring fear, justifiable or un-justifiable, into its heart. The books mentioned dealt with some things relatively far in the future when they were written and, with the possible exception of 1984, have not arrived in our physical reality. It is, however, more and more difficult, to write such lasting fiction because of the pace of the progression of technology. Science fiction today becomes science reality tomorrow. A case in point is Bruce Sterling’s 1988 “Islands In The Net.” Written at a time in which only academics, computer professionals and a few others were “online,” the world of textbased virtual reality (early 1990s) and then the World Wide Web (mid-1990s) caught up with Sterling’s tale of total connectivity and “data pirates” (although it took until 2012 for Google’s “Google Glass” to catch up with Sterling’s vision of personal screens with global connectivity). The use of technology has become so pervasive that some of the people writing cautionary tales about the use of technology are neither science fiction writers nor technologists but are writers with a political or social outlook or agenda. They are often writing critiques of present uses of technology (usually the Internet) and may have a strong ideological bias. I have no problems with any of this, no matter what side of the ideological coin they are on, as long as they “get the technology right;” to not get it right is a disservice to readers. The December 11th issue of this of paper, the “Westchester Guardian” (available both in print and online -- http:// www.westchesterguardian.com/12_4_14/ wg_12_11_fin.pdf ) contains two pieces by regular contributors who do not normally write about technology, Kurt Colucci and Luke Hamilton. One gets the technology right; the other sadly doesn’t. In his “The Ultimate ‘Reality Show’ is ‘You’,” Colucci asks us to return to our early teenage years and consider an imaginary world that might be posited by a history teacher – a world in which the government knows everything – that’s EVERYTHING – what you buy, your phone calls, where you shop, your online life (banking, social media, search history, website viewing online purchases, e-mails), where you live, your marital status, what you read, your medical record – in short, everything! Colucci imagines that you would be shocked or, at least, would have been in your seventh grade years. Without mentioning the Snowden revelations by name, Colucci shows that this total surveillance world is really closer than we think and points to video cameras, investigative databases, GPS surveillance, and other data collection devices and systems set up to “protect us.” He writes “The purpose of this ’scrutiny,’ in the eyes of the lawmakers, is to discover patterns of behavior that makes it easier to find terrorists and common criminals. They say this type of database is necessary to protect a civilized society because it will allow the ‘authorities’ to root out the bad guys.” Colucci isn’t buying it, writing “We are living in a growing police state and there is no running from it.” about social media, I find the column itself to be full of invective – ex. “any new source of prosperity and innovation is a magnet for the social vampirism of the left” and “After all fascists and progressives have a long history of militarizing social and political struggles.” “Fascists and Progressives”?? How would it be if I used “Conservatives and Pedophiles” in the same sentence? It’s just not inappropriate – it’s a cheap trick to demean those of opposing views. One of the problems that I see is that, in our polarized society, most do not read or listen to opposing opinions. A poll, I believe, last year showed that well under 10% of viewers of the Rachel Maddow Show are Conservative and that approximately an equal number of Sean Hannity viewers are Liberal. If we don’t consider opposing opinions, we will never question our own beliefs. We live in a society with many complex problems – the appropriate balance between security and freedom / privacy (as addressed by Colucci), the use of “offshoring” which benefits consumer prices but eliminates jobs, the ongoing impact of technology on employment, the “disappearing middle class,” and on and on. We need respectful discussion of these problems and attempts to find real solutions in these areas as we move along in the 21st Century. Comments on this column to johnmac13@ gmail.com Creative Disruption is a continuing series examining the impact of constantly accelerating technology on the world around us. These changers normally happen under our personal radar until we find that the world as we knew it is no more. John F. McMullen is a writer, poet, college professor and radio host. Links to other writings, Podcasts, & Radio Broadcasts at www.johnmac13.com, his books are available on Amazon, and he blogs at http://open.salon. com/blog/johnmac13. © 2014 John F. McMullen Page 8 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 TravelSection Ravello—The Amalfi Coast’s Best Kept Secret By Richard Levy Thinking about taking a romantic vacation in Italy-- maybe to Capri, Positano, or Sorrento on the Amalfi Coast? Well forget about them and keep heading down the Amalfi Drive, both hands on the wheel, until you reach the charming, historic seaside town of Amalfi. Take a sharp left at the Ravello sign and make your way up the twisting, winding mountain to the “Amalfi Coast’s best kept secret”: the incomparable Ravello. This mountain top village perched high above the entire coast has some of the most breathtaking views you’ll ever see. In the 6th century, Ravello was home to rebellious noblemen who resisted the ruling dukes of Amalfi, due to Ravello’s easily defensible, high mountain location. For hundreds of years, nobody ever talked about Ravello, until by chance, composer Richard Wagner came to the town, in 1880, and fell in love with Ravello’s serenity and beauty, raving about it to all his opera friends. Many years later, the controversial literary figure Gore Vidal almost single-handedly spoiled the secret of Ravello by building a spectacular villa he named “La Rondinaia,” on a cliff overlooking the Amafi Coast. He invited lovers, famous actors, writers, composers and political figures to La Ronindaia, including JFK and Jackie. The media reported his lavish antics and before long, trendy celebs made it their secret destination. Ravello is an idyllic, charming, historic and importantly, a largely tourist-free town with beautiful gardens and fountains everywhere. Ravello has one of Italy’s most spectacular grand plazas, surrounded by places to eat, drink, shop and people watch. Or perhaps you will prefer to just sit in a café, leisurely sipping cappuccinos as you gaze out at Ravello’s non-stop, magnificent vistas. Where to stay? Well, for the one decadent splurge of your holiday, try to get a reservation at the world famous, (and expensive) Five Star Caruso Hotel, (check it out online). The Caruso features a stunning infinity pool that appears to go right to the edge of a cliff, high above the Amalfi Coast. And there are other charming, more affordable hotels, like II Ducato di Ravello, La Moresca, Hotel Bondies or my favorite, the Villa Maria, also with incredible views and a fabulous restaurant overlooking the Amalfi coast. Visitors can also find affordable apartments to rent by the week or by the month. But if you’re an old fashioned romantic type like me, stay where we did, in fabulous designer apartment justifiably named “La Dolce Vita.” It was total heaven. (Check it out at apartmentsravello.it) La Dolce Vita has two corner terraces offering spectacular vistas Wake of boat as it leaves Positano of the Amalfi Coast. We had breakfast on the terrace, sunbathed during the afternoons and sipped wine at sunset while devouring tidbits of fresh mozzarella, wrapped in slices of prosciutto. By the way, the “La Dolce Vita”’ high season rate is $145 Euros a night, and worth it - April-October; and only $110 Euros off season November-March. There are a few small family-run restaurants in Ravello serving authentic Italian home cooking. My favorite was Cumpa Cosimo, Via Roma, 44; where “Netta,” the owner, recommends her delicious “Five Pasta Entrée: small portions of five delicious gourmet pasta dishes. She’ll come by, as you’re finishing, ask which you liked best and say, “Maybe you’d like some more?” And she’ll give you more! My other favorite restaurant was also Gore Vidals: Vittoria, Via Dei Rufolo, 3. The must see historic places in Ravello are Villa Ruffalo, which is right in town, and Villa Cimbrone. Villa Ruffalo is very beautiful and they have concerts every week. Richard Wagner used their huge color-filled gardens as his inspiration for the home of the Flower Maidens, in his opera Parsifal. Villa Cimbrone, is a medieval-style villa with magnificent rose gardens made famous in part, because Greta Garbo liked to stay there. Be sure to make reservations for an event at the sleekly spectacular Ravello View From Our “La Dolce Vita” Apartment In Ravello. Auditorium, designed by Brazilian architect hour-long hike down the mountain to the Oscar Neimeyer. Ravello is also renowned seaside village of Minori next to Ravello, for having one of Italy’s best music festivals enjoy lunch and a local wine in a seaside - check out The Ravello Concert Society restaurant, then catch the bus back up to schedule of concerts from March through Ravello. October, also known as The Amalfi Coast You must take two very memorable Chamber Orchestra. day trips to Positano and Capri by boat In the Plaza of Ravello, you’ll find the from Amalfi’s harbor, right below Ravello. beautiful Romanesque cathedral of San Positano, the former jet set hot spot, is totally Pantaleon with it’s mosaic-laden pulpit beautiful. Have lunch on the beach at Le and its bronze doors, designed by Barisano Cambusa restaurant; order their mixed hot da Trani, featuring 54 panels depicting the and cold appetizers and fish of the day. Rent Passion of Christ. Be sure to spend some beach chairs and soak up the golden Amalfi time (and money) at the famous Ceramiche sun. Walk off your lunch by strolling the d’ Arte ceramic factory, which makes the winding fashionable shopping street that most artful, gorgeous dishes and ceramics runs through town. (Wear comfortable shoes in all of Italy. Mention my name to owners because it’s all up-hill.) The moment your Madalina or Pascal and they’ll give you a boat approaches Capri, the colorful, breathceramic gift from their factory. taking harbor filled with luxury yachts, will The Amalfi Coast is famous for its’ blow you away. Have a delicious lunch at any of the outdoor restaurants overlooking gigantic lemons, the size of oranges and super- aromatic, used to make the local the harbor. Take the funicular up to Ana Capri and just wander around, shop, stop in liquor: Limoncello. Bring home a bottle to a café and take a taxi around the island; your remind you of Ravello! If you’re in good shape, take the scenic, Continued on page 9 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 TRAVEL Ravello—The Amalfi Coast’s Best Kept Secret Continued from page 8 driver will point out all the villas which dot the island. While staying in Ravello, do plan to spend some time in the seaside village of Amalfi. Visit the Duomo di Saint Andrea Cathedral, a unique blend of Moorish and Gothic architecture. Have an Amalfi lunch at II Tari restaurant a few minutes North of the Duomo. Order local ‘Scialatielli alla Sarana” extra long pasta with their homemade sauce and wash it down with a pitcher of the fruity Amalfi wine. Between the scent of all the fragrant flowers, lemon trees and salty air, breathing in the Ravello air is so intoxicating, it’s almost an aphrodisiac. Maybe that’s what makes it such a romantic place! When it’s time to leave Ravello, you’ll probably say like most people lucky enough to experience the magic serenity of Ravello, “Ohh, I can’t wait to come back!” Getting to Ravello is easy. Just fly from New York to Rome, spend the night, have dinner at my very favorite restaurant, La Rampa a few blocks up from the Spanish Steps at Piazza Mignanelli 18. We loved their fried artichokes and stuffed zucchini blossoms appetizer, followed by the Vongale: pasta with baby clams. For dessert, make room for their chocolate covered meringues. In the morning, take the express train to Naples, and then a taxi from Naples to Ravello. It’s a million times safer than driving. Make reservations before you go, and contact Michelle at ravellotaxi.it. The cost is about $100 Euros and worth it: you don’t want to be on the Amalfi Drive unless you are a former Grand Prix driver. Michelle will have Our Rented “La Dolce Vita” apartment in Ravello. The Infinity Pool At The Caruso Hotel In Ravello a driver waiting for you at the Naples station. On the very scenic, two-hour, drive you will pass the infamous Mt. Vesuvius and city of Pompei. Hopefully I’ve managed to convince you to consider spending your next vacation in Ravello. And if you go, please don’t tell too many people just how fabulous Ravello is, you see my girlfriend and I are returning in September and we like it just the way it is. And whatever you do, don’t write a travel article raving about what a great, “must go to place,” Ravello is. After all, it’s been the Amafi Coast’s bestkept secret for hundreds of years and we want to keep it that way! Grazie. The Ravello Auditorium Designed By Brazilian Architect Oscar Neimeyer The Building And Terrace View Of Our “La Dolce Vita” Apartment Positano Page 9 Page 10 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Arts/EntertainmentSection From Pitiful to Playful By JOHN SIMON Pocatello For divers dramatists, as diverse as Saroyan, Rattigan, O’Neill and Ayckbourn, the restaurant or barroom has proved a rewarding locale. There it is that people from various social strata come together, and the author can assess the society of his era, either naturalistically or with varying degrees of stylization. Count among naturalists the Genius Award-winning Samuel D, Hunter, who, in “Pocatello,” locates the action in his native state of Idaho, viewed by some as an unadulterated paradise, inhabited by down-to-earth, unspoiled human beings. I myself, during a brief stay in Boise, the state capital, got a rather romantic impression of a remote, paradisiac location, which made this alleged Gateway to the Northwest immediately alluring. As for Pocatello, ranked “one of the top small places to move and raise a family,” it would seem a prime environment for a pleasant purview of humanity at its most insouciantly playful. But that is hardly what Hunter provides. We are in the local branch of an Italian-style restaurant chain, during what, proudly proclaimed by a sign, is Family Week. We are indeed treated to two related, Pictured L to R: Brenda Whele, Brian Hutchinson, Crystal Finn and T. R. Knight in a scene from the Playwrights Horizons world premiere production of Pocotello by Samuel D. Hunter. Photo by Jeremy Daniel Pictured L to R: Leah Karpel, Danny Wolohan, T. R. Knight, Elvy Yost, Cameron Scoggins and Jessica Dickey in a scene from Pocotello. Photo by Jeremy Daniel. T. R. Knight in a scene from Pocotello. Photo by Jeremy Daniel friendly families at separate tables. At one of them, we get Cole, a patriarch in the early stages of Alzheimer’s, his daughter-in-law Tammy, and her daughter Becky, 17. Troy, her father, is an atypical waiter at the restaurant, whose manager, Eddie, a closeted homosexual, is the play’s protagonist. At another table, we get Eddie’s older brother, Nick, who has moved to Michigan for a better job, his wife Kelly (not, as it emerges, a perfect marriage), and Nick and Eddie’s widowed mother, the not so serene Doris. Other waiters include Max, a former meth addict, supposedly clean, and Isabelle, a free-spirited, promiscuous young woman, the one apparently untroubled person. Out of them, Hunter spins a tale alternatingly cheerful and grim, comic and dramatic, fraternal and hostile. Reading the script, I was struck by a punctuation mark all Hunter’s own, dash plus ellipsis: -- . . . The dash for a tense or merely uncomfortable pause, the ellipsis for a thought remaining incompletely expressed, either out of the speaker’s reconsidered reluctance or the interlocutor’s ill-considered interruption. Of this there is altogether too much. A great deal remains unsaid, notably Eddie’s homosexuality, heavily suggested but never stated, whether that’s how things still are in Idaho or because Hunter, who is gay, feels uneasy about fully addressing it. The dialogue can be convincing. Thus Isabelle, caught in flagrante after a night of sex with Max at the restaurant, “”Look Eddie we’re sorry, but he lives in that group home thingy and my roommate is all judgy. . . . We’ve only done this three times, and we won’t do it again. And we’ve never contaminated anything or whatever, We just do it missionary, with most of our clothes on. And I never do any of his meth, I swear.“ And here is Max: “It’s not like before. I just do a tiny bit before we-- . . . It’s just recreational,” and so on, ending with “I’m not really addicted anymore--.” Or take Tammy, unhappy in her marriage to Troy: “This isn’t-- . . . I see myself. I think about who I’ve turned into, and it’s like—I don’t even know who I am anymore. I’ve turned into this strange person, this person I don’t even like and I—“ Becky, Tammy and Troy’s daughter, doesn’t even want to be called Becky, or anything else, because no one in America deserves to have a name: “Grandpa. I just hate everything about life.” And Tammy again: “Maybe I need to accept that . . . we both need to realize that we aren’t gonna be the people we wanted to be, we aren’t going to- -. . . I mean there are plenty of unhappy people in the world, why should we be the ones who get to be happy? Maybe we’re just unhappy people.” As semidemented Cole puts it, “Eh, lucidity is overworked, remember that,” Unhappiness in “Pocatello” is endemic and, with the probable exception of Isabelle, nobody even knows how not to be unhappy. Again, Cole tells Becky, “For the intelligent person, the world is full of idiots.” Yet even that knowledge, he concedes, is “not very helpful.” But neither is it helpful for a playwright to portray such almost unrelieved misery. The acting is almost uniformly persuasive under Davis McCallum’s solid direction on Laurel Helpern’s wonderfully authoritative restaurant set. T.R. Knight is a thoroughly sympathetic Eddie, occasionally exploding, as when he tears the banal pop music-supplying loudspeaker angrily off the wall. Ordinariness may be more stressful than generally conceded, but is it as distressing as depicted here? Every Brilliant Thing The hour-long “Every Brilliant Thing” is a piece full of zany, sometimes surreal humor. Based on a short story by Britain’s Duncan Macmillan, “Sleeve Notes,” it Continued on page 11 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Page 11 EYE ON THEATRE From Pitiful to Playful Continued from page 10 was adapted by him, George Perrin (his director), and Jonny Donohoe (his first and steady performer), after eight years of turning it into a play with audience participation. It begins with the Narrator (henceforward N) arriving half an hour early, and, by chatting, picking three of the audience members for somewhat longer parts. They and the rest of us get slips of paper with numbers and bits of text, sometimes no more than a word or two, to be read out loud when N calls out the number. For starters, the seven-year-old N, whose depressed mother has attempted suicide, compiles a list of eight brilliant things worth living for. This begins with ice cream and water fights and ends with people falling over and Super Mario. (It is to change somewhat for whatever country the show is playing in.) Soon eight is not enough and we head for a thousand and, eventually, a million, with, needless to say, ever greater and greater leaps. Only Dad, a Veterinarian (for N’s dog, Sherlock Bones, impersonated by a coat borrowed from a spectator), Mrs. Patterson (a school councilor) and finally Sam, N’s inamorata, getting the longer parts. Mrs. P. also has to take off a sock and put it on her fist to impersonate a puppet. List items now include Cookie Monster, without proof that he is superior to spaghetti bolonaise [sic in the script], a ham and mayo sandwich just without the ham, knowing someone well enough to get them to check your teeth for broccoli, Christopher Walken’s voice (1654) and Christopher Walken’s hair (1655), the prospect of dressing up as a Mexican wrestler—not the action of dressing up but the prospect of it, a lot about “The Sorrows of Young Werther,” finding out that Beyoncé is Gustaf [sic] Mahler’s sixth cousin five times removed, and so on. By way of 1000, N concludes that he might be a genius, especially when Dad, who sequesters himself to listen to his mostly vinyl records, has his hideout invaded by N, who enjoys the records even before the music starts for “the faint hiss and crackle of the sharp metal point”; and, after the music begins, for listening while “reading through the sleeve notes.” Every Brillian Thing Poster N’s discourse (not in Dad’s room) is often interrupted by a few recorded bars of his pop favorites, and, since the show is performed in the round, by some of his wanderings through the audience. Unfortunately, when Donohoe is not facing you, he is hard or impossible to hear. As for the audience, shamefully none of them can properly speak up. Later on, N provides a portable mike, at which point the audience can be heard, proving only a slight improvement, if any. Somewhat later, N, who thought he might be a genius, proclaims, “I’m so grateful to be ordinary.” Try to sell that notion to the characters of “Pocatello.” Or indeed to us in the audience, who might appreciate a bit more ordinariness, like, for instance, a ham and mayo sandwich with the ham not removed. John Simon has written for over 50 years on theatre, film, literature, music and fine arts for the Hudson Review, New Leader, New Criterion, National Review, New York Magazine, Opera News, Weekly Standard, Broadway.com and Bloomberg News. He reviews books for the New York Times Book Review and Washington Post. To learn more, visit the www.JohnSimon-Uncensored. com website. Jonny Donahoe in a scene from Every Brilliant Thing. Photo by Matthew Murphy. Jonny Donahoe in a scene from Every Brilliant Thing at The Barrow St. Theatre. Photo by Matthew Murphy ADVERTISE YOUR DISPLAY HELP WANTED ADS IN THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN! Do you have jobs available at your business? The Westchester Guardian Ads due Wednesday one week prior to publication date. Publication every Thursday Call today to reserve Display Ad Space in our next issue: 914.216.1674 Page 12 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 LITERATURE Canoeing The Congo Author Philip Harwood, Troubador Publishing, Ltd. Jan 1, 2012 Book Review by Lee Daniels “And this also has been one of the dark places of the earth,” Joseph Conrad’s character Marlow wrote about the Congo in his 1899 novel Heart of Darkness. For centuries, the word “Congo” has been synonymous with mystery and intrigue. Its political and social upheavals, often with violent outcomes over the years and through various governments, to its split into the current Democratic Republic of the Congo--comprising the majority of the land mass--and the Republic of the Congo, have lent a vivid notoriety to this central African country, roughly onequarter the size of the U.S. It has attracted the likes of missionary explorer Dr. David Livingstone, in his search of the source of the Nile; journalist and renowned explorer Henry Stanley, during the mid-19th century; French novelist André Gide, who trekked through the Congo during his two-year expedition in Central Africa in 1925; British Army Officer John Blashford-Snell, who navigated the Congo River using inflatable rafts and jet boats in 1974; British naturalist Redmond O’Hanlon, who traveled through the Congo in search of the remains of a legendary dinosaur in 1995; American journalist Jeffrey Tayler, who journeyed up the Congo River in 2000 using a variety of means of transportation; British journalist Tim Butcher, in an attempt to follow the trail of Stanley’s expedition through the Congo, in 2004; and most recently, British wilderness guide Phil Harwood in 2008, the first explorer to paddle the length of the Congo River from source to sea. In 2008, Harwood, a former Royal Marine and expeditionary guide from London, researched, gathered funding for, and embarked a five-month solo attempt to navigate the Congo River in a 15-foot canoe, from its source to the Atlantic Ocean. At nearly 3,000 miles in length, the Congo River is the eighth-longest in the world, running through 10 countries, with a flow rate, or discharge, averaging 1,448,000 cubic feet per second, just behind that of the Amazon. It is actually comprised of a series of connecting bodies of water and tributaries that run through 10 countries, including the Chambeshi River, Bangweulu Swamp, the Luapula River, Lake Mweru, the Luvua River, the Lualaba River, and the famous Stanley Falls (now known as the Boyoma Falls). Harwood began his canoe trip In Zambia, several hours of cycling and walking on jungle trails from the village Masamba, near the source of the Chambeshi River, which he ascertained through meticulous research to the most likely of the three possible actual sources of the Congo, at that point taking the form of just a trickle of water. Arriving at the source of the river after so many months of planning, preparation, and side-stepping bureaucratic obstacles and delays through his resourcefulness, his elation is palpable. “…It was quite a moment when we finally forced a way through the thick bush in a pocket of lush greenery to get to the source. The tiny spring by a banyan tree was the start of 4,703 km of an incredibly diverse river, the most powerful in Africa. A book I once read said that the water here takes six months to reach the Atlantic. I hoped to do it in three, but seeing the tiny trickle bubbling up from the ground caused me to rethink that estimate. Either way I was tremendously excited to be so close to starting.” Hampered by bureaucracy, thieving immigration and corrupt police officials, and harassed periodically by locals demanding money from him, Harwood had to call on every shred of calm and self-restraint, as well as his ingenuity, to avoid disaster at several points on his journey. At one time, while paddling near the village of Kasongo, on the Middle Lualaba River in Congo, he was chased by four men who he was almost certain were ready to injure or kill him to get to his money and belongings: “I still had $3,000 in cash on me, along with my stills camera and video, and I was damned if I was going to give them anything. I was pretty sure these guys were not bluffing and were prepared to get violent unless I put the fear of God into them. For me, if you threaten to fight, you’ve got to Philip Harwood Philip Harwood be prepared to fight. As embarrassing as it seems now, I tried to visualize a machete battle to get myself mentally prepared for the worst-case scenario. I didn’t look around, hoping and praying they had given up the chase. Even my thick canvas top was soaked, and I could feel the sweat running down my body. Some 20 minutes later, convinced they couldn’t have kept up, I glanced around and to my horror there were still two dugout canoes with four guys standing up in each, paddling like madmen and less than 20 m away. When they saw me stop, the shouting continued: ‘Mazungu! Give us money!’” For the greater part of his journey, however, Harwood is captivated by the kindness shown to him by locals who offer to help him find his way, obtain clearance for passage through certain villages, give him a place to sleep, or share food with him, and it is clear that his ultimate impression of the people who helped him along the way is what made such an arduous and hazardous journey so worthwhile. Near a particularly difficult passage of the Middle Lualaba River known as “The Gates of Hell,” he describes this camaraderie, which, transcending two cultures very foreign to one another, is rooted in the act of a stranger recognizing and helping a fellow man at his task: “The more serious the water, the more useful eddies are. This next section didn’t have any at first, but I just managed to hold it all together till it started to get ugly. Luckily there was an eddy on the right just before the nasty bit, and I broke out of the main flow into the safety of the reeds. Clambering and dragging my canoe over numerous fish traps, I finally came across a tight S-bend with steep rocky banks. It was no more than 15 m wide with the whole river pulsating through it. It wasn’t so much white water as hugely powerful surging boils, where the whole river was rising and falling a couple feet at a time, such was the force of the water in so small an area. As if on cue, a teenager appeared from nowhere and gesticulated that I needed to wait for the right time to paddle it, and when he realized I understood the message held up his hand and studied the water. Carrying the boat around would have been a lot safer, but also a lot of hard work. Instead I put on my buoyancy aid and waited for him to give me the go-ahead. I put all my trust in this complete stranger with a friendly face. After a couple of minutes, down went the hand, frantically waving me on, and 20 seconds later it was all over, job done. I gave him some fishhooks and line for that little gem.” In reflecting on the trials and tribulations of his Congo odyssey, along with the great sense of accomplishment he felt at the end of the journey, Harwood never loses the self-effacement and sense of humility with which he not only writes, but follows as a code of living: “…I had achieved what I had set out to do. More importantly, I had been privileged to experience the best and the worst of human nature, both with the local people and in my own behavior. These lessons alone were well worth any hardships I may have encountered. I also hope that I’d never complain about anything, ever again.” More information about Phil Harwood and his work, including the 48-minute documentary film he produced about the trip, is available on his website: www.canoeingthecongo.com. Photos Courtesy of Troubador Publishing Ltd, 9 Priory Business Park, Wistow Road, Kibworth Beauchamp, Leicester LE8 0RX, www.troubador.co.uk Lee Daniels, a former reporter for the Journal News and Reuters, is Arts & Leisure writer for the Westchester Guardian. His work has appeared in the Danbury News-Times, Litchfield County Times, and Orlando Sentinel. He is the winner of the first-place prize in NonFiction in the 2013 Porter Fleming Literary Competition. THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Page 13 walks are accompanied by his music, an excellent example of Arabian rap, contributing to the energy of the film, which runs 70 minutes. This interesting and creative documentary includes interviews and talks with many other people, capturing a broad spectrum of Libyan society: former guerillas, workers, businessmen, politicians, political prisoners, journalists, artists, who comment on the issues raised by the story’s main character. Through the use of heavily edited televised video-footage, creating contexts of images that are sometimes highly manipulated, juxtaposed against the use of unedited long-sequence shots, the director tried to achieve a certain truthfulness that leaves a lasting impression. CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES Yusef’s Song By Sherif Awad After the Arab Spring movement overturned the rulers of Tunisia and Egypt; Libya experienced a fullscale revolt beginning on 17 February 2011. Yusef ’s Song, a new documentary, that took two years to complete, shows another side of the Arab Spring, particularly in Libya. Filmed in the Libyan cities of Misrata, Tripoli and Benghazi, the documentary revolves around its title character Yusef, the most famous rapper in the country right now. While living in Benghazi, this Yusef chronicles the revolution in his own country through his lyrics and music. His songs express many stories about the vision of young Libyans for their country following the rule of Muammar Gaddafi, which lasted more than forty years. The camera follows Yusef everywhere, recording his daily routine and his intense conversations on everyday matters, social issues and politics. Yusef ’s Arab rap songs, accompany his presence on the screen, adding beat and vigor to the moving images. The director of Yusef ’s Song, Kostas Pilakos, comes from the other side of the Mediterranean Sea and he was born in Athens, Greece, in 1969. Pilakos studied economics, cinematography and journalism and has worked as a journalist, independent filmmaker and producer. His work has taken him to Europe, Asia, Latin America and Africa. Pilakos has collaborated with magazines, radio stations and agencies in Greece and abroad, covering stories worldwide both for the media and for his own documentaries. Kostos is an accomplished photographer who has been honored in photo contests and his work has been showcased in two solo and four group exhibits. Pilakos has also directed Welcome to the Show, (2013), a documentary about Greek contemporary singer Pavlos Sidiropoulos, a pioneer of his time, who was among the first to combine rock with Greek verse and traditional music. Sidiropoulos was also the one who introduced rock music to the public, in a period when leftist political song was predominant as an aftermath of the military junta (196774). Sidiropoulos is a legendary figure of the Greek underground scene, and one of its most influential ones. A restless mind, he experimented not only in music and composition, but also in acting, poetry and writing. This film records and preserves his musical legacy for future generations. His background as a reporter, enable Pliakos to observe very closely, the events of the Arab Spring, particularly those in Libya. Eventually, one of his colleagues inspired Pliakos to give more attention to this evolving revolution, orchestrated by western intervention. In March 2012, he started to make contacts with Libyans in Greece seeking short stories, faces and events until he made contact with the rap music scene in Libya. With the help of his Libyan partner, Mohamed Ben Gkouzi, the director began to learn more about songs written after the outbreak of the so-called Arab Spring. Through music and lyrics, a vision unfolded about a new generation of people who know little about politics and the western world; who only aspire to a better future. Yusef is an artist whose music and songs are very sharp and touching. He uses social media to upload his work and though he is a young man who admires Che Guevara, he avoids aligning himself with a specific political ideology. Yusef ’s songs take on politicians along with Libya’s struggle over the past few years. He is a symbol for the revolution and survival; currently one of the “voices” of a revolution that had high expectations for great social change with lot of dreams, hopes, and frustrations. Yusef ’s talks and “The doctors understood how important it was to get me back to work in a week.” C M Ricky R., colon patient Y CM CY CMY K Diana O’Neill Holistic Health Services ©2014 Hudson Valley Surgical Group | All Rights Reserved. MY The Advantages of Laparoscopic Colon Surgery Hudson Valley Surgical Group’s Minimally Invasive Center offers patients a better choice for colon surgery. Hudson Valley Surgical Group Hudson Valley Surgical Group 4000+ laparoscopic surgeries performed providing patients the latest in Minimally Invasive Surgery while utilizing the most advanced technology. Robert Raniolo, MD & Har Chi Lau, MD Castle Connolly’s Top Doctors™ MINIMALLY INVASIVE CENTER 777 N. Broadway, Suite 204, Sleepy Hollow, NY 10591 914.631.3660 | HudsonValleySurgeons.com I will journey with you during challenging times such as grieving the loss of a loved one or recovering from a negative relationship. Counseling • Energy Healing • Hypnotism • Spiritual & Psychic Healing By appointment, only • Free consultation given on first visit Holistic Health Services • 240 North Ave. Suite 204 A, New Rochelle, NY 10801 • 914.630.1928 Community/Gover COMMUNITY Page 14 Westchester Community College Unde THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 By NANCY KING LE G A L N O T I C E S LAUGHTEROLOGY, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 11/10/14. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Mr. Robert Mankoff 122 Ridegecrest Rd Briarcliff Manor, NY 10510. Purpose: Any lawful activity. 774 POST ROAD, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 9/24/14. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to C/O Stern Keiser & Panken 1025 Westchester Ave Ste.305 White Plains, NY 10604. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Open 7 Days A Week NYC’s #1 TOPlESS SPORTS BAR THE STAN GROUP, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 5/23/14. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Incorp Services, Inc One Commerce Plaza 99 Washington Ave Ste. 805-A Albany, NY 12210-2822. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Registered Agent: Incorp Services, Inc One Commerce Plaza 99 Washington Ave Ste. 805-A Albany, NY 12210-2822. • Gentlemen’s Club • sushi RestauRant • Fine DininG NYC’s oNlY BoDY SUSHI 252 West 43rd St. 212-819-9300 (Between 7th & 8th Ave.) www.mycheetahsnyc.com FREE ADMISSION WITH THIS PASS The New Don’t Don’t Waste Waste Your Your Time Time Anywhere Anywhere Else Else Club Club New York New York NEW YORK’S NEW YORK’S PREMIER PREMIER GENTLEMEN’S GENTLEMEN’S CABARET Notice of formation of IMFORMATIO, LLC. Art. of org. filed with SSNY on 11/24/14. Off. location: Westchester County. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 2828 Broadway 9E, New York, NY 11024. Purpose: Any lawful activity. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. 35176 253RD AVENUE LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 12/12/14. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Maggie J. Segrich 116 Main St Irvington, NY 10533. Purpose: Any lawful activity. THE CAFE AT 178TH, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 7/17/14. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to The LLC 686 Bronx River Rd #5G Yonkers, NY 10704. Purpose: Any lawful activity. MNG 178TH, LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 7/16/14. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to The LLC 139 Hart Ave Yonkers, NY 10704. Purpose: Any lawful activity. CABARET Escape Reality… Escape The VIP Club! Escape to Reality… First Class Adult Entertainment, Sushi Bar and Lounge. HAPPY HOUR @ Entertainment, THE VIP! First Class Adult 2-For-1BarDrinks Sushi and Lounge. Mon – Sat Before 9PM Escape to The VIP Club! SYNERGY MEDICAL ARTS, PLLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 11/14/14. Office in Westchester Co. SSNY design. Agent of PLLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to The PLLC 103 S Bedford Rd Ste. 205 Mount Kisco, NY 10549. Purpose: Any lawful activity. HAPPY HOUR @ THE VIP! COMPLIMENTARY ADMISSION 2-For-1 FOR TWODrinks WITH THIS PASS Mon – Sat Before 9PM 20 W. 20th ST. (btwn 5th & 6th) COMPLIMENTARY ADMISSION 212-633-1199 FOR TWO WITH THIS PASSs thevipclubnyc.com SUMMONS INDEX NO. 53326/2014 SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF WESTCHESTER Date Filed: 03/06/2014 Plaintiff designates Westchester County as the place of trial. Venue is based upon the County in which the mortgaged premises is situated. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., s/b/m to Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, s/b/m to Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc, s/b/m to Norwest Mortgage, Inc., Plaintiff, -against- Ogedi Ohajekwe a/k/a Ogedi A. Ohajekwe, Chinwe Ohajekwe a/k/a Chinwe F. Ohajekwe, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Medical Management Corp of America, John H. Kaufman, Eric G. Cheng, Yvonne Choi, Samuel Yakubu dba Sky Brokerage LLC and “JOHN DOE #1” through “JOHN DOE #10”, the last ten names being fictitious and unknown to the plaintiff, the person or parties intended being the persons or parties, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the mortgaged premises described in the Complaint,, Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT(S): YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your Answer or, if the Complaint is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of Appearance on the attorneys for the plaintiff within twenty (20) days after service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service; or within thirty (30) days after service is complete if this Summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York; or within sixty (60) days if it is the United States of America. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT THE OBJECT of the above captioned action is to foreclosure a Mortgage to secure $189,000.00 and interest, recorded in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Westchester on October 1, 1992, in Liber 16507, Page 269, covering premises known as 542 South 5th Avenue, Mount Vernon, NY 10550. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. DATED: Williamsville, New York: January 23, 2014 BY: Ashley Schaub. Frenkel, Lambert, Weiss, Weisman & Gordon, LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, New York 11706 (631) 969-3100 Our File No.: 01-068744-F00 Westchester SHOPPING Community College is the latest public institution to come under scrutiny of the New York State Inspector General By Marywhen Keonit was revealed that a former assistant basketball coach falsified academic Merry Christmas transcripts and forged an administrator’s & belated Happythe community college signature. As a result, Chanukah to its all of has canceled 2014-2015 Basketball our readers! My staff season. However the story doesn’t stop is hard at word distribthere, because many student athletes use uting our paper; with Westchester Community College as a any luck, you are reading this on Tuesday or springboard and to you playstill at have NCAA Wednesday a littlefour-year time to colleges; the scandal has now spanned finish last minute shopping, in whichseveral case, statesisand several teams. time of the essence! So, take a deep breath Formeryour Mt.surroundings: Vernon High School star, and survey Jamell a star player for up WCC DoWalker you seewas a Starbucks? Order and andthewasbarista at thelovingly school spoons on a fullfrothy basketball as milk Retail Recon onto your steaming cappuccino, check out the many coffee mugs, travel cups, K-cup packages and gift cards on the counter in front of you. But wait! Starbucks also has CDs for sale, great presents for anyone who enjoys popular music. Odds are, their checkout lines are not as long as those in By NANCY KING list and other stores, so survey your shopping your options. I love Starbucks and On a I spend frigida lot of time there,November as a constant supply of evening,higha quality caffeine keeps me going during all COMMEMORATION scholarship. He played on the award winning team and was granted, upon completion of what was thought to be a two-year stint with WCC, a full scholarship to play ball with those late night Don’t see nationally rankedediting Floridasessions. A&M University. aNot Starbucks? Dunkin Donuts has long after his arrival at Florida ground A&M, coffee packages tipster in a pretty holiday bag an anonymous informed thegift college that make a great hostess present. and the NCAA that Walker’s scholarship at Does have a favorite res-it WCC hadyour been giftee stripped a year prior, after taurant? Is it nearby? Hurry over for a Gift was revealed he only taken one class at the Certificate – Everyone appreciates being college. In order to maintain a scholarship at treated to dinner and gift certificates come the college, a student must be matriculated in really handy at the most unexpected times. for asalons full credit Nail alsoload. offer gift certificates so your Upon it was giftee can befurther properlyinvestigation, pampered, as soon as revealed that there are several other former time permits. WCC students are path? also playing basIs Best Buy who in your A gift card ketballBest for Buy Division 1 schools that they from is very useful toand purchase all too might be at aCDs new and school under less kinds of electronics, DVDs. thanAnd transparent St –John’ then therecircumstances. is the Apple Store I ams University, Red Central Storm more familiarfamous with thefor onetheir at Grand team,there has isopened an investigation into the but also one at The Westchester. Apple stocks great products and many accessories, at a variety of price points that come in handy for Apple addicts. The stores are generally very well staffed and the person who helps you is the person who checks you out, so there is very little waiting around. of the White PlainsyouDepartment of I hope this helps complete your holiday a minimum of stress! Public shopping Safety with to commemorate the Have wonderful holiday! thirdaanniversary of the shooting death MK of Kenneth Chamberlain Sr. The 68 Community Marks 3 Years Since vigil was held in front year old former marine was shot to Reserve Now for Holiday Parties! ITALIAN CUISINE Zagat Rated “Excellent” Voted “Best Italian Restaurant ” Westchester Magazine, 2006 Open 7 Days : Mon.-Thurs. Noon - 10PM • Fri. Sat. & Sun. Noon -11PM RESERVE NOW FOR HOLIDAY PARTIES 2 PARTY ROOMS AVAIL. SEATING 75 & 100 914.779.4646 www.ciaoeastchester.com Ciao • 5-7 JOHN ALBANESE PLACE, EASTCHESTER, NY 10709 20 W. 20th ST. (btwn 5th & 6th) 212-633-1199 s thevipclubnyc.com WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN LEGAL ADVERTISING [email protected] eligibilit WCC Connec scripts o who als College and SU all of th to thei attendin At assistan Last m provide an adm so. Odd anythin thought Nearly athlete script fr PUBLICATION EVERY THURSDAY: 914.216.1674 M-F 11A- 5P SUBMIT ADS TUESDAY, 10 DAYS PRIOR TO RUN DATE death the ear 19, 201 went o mornin that h he wan should check officers elderly the el more a Chamb killed b alleged Sh Attorn Grand and of the dea justifia that th him w in per officer inciden Hart. H out the In Chamb Chamb THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 Page 15 Movie Review Exodus: Gods and Kings By Mary Keon Director Ridley Scott brings the story of Moses and Pharaoh Ramses II to life in this epic film, dedicated to the memory of his brother, Tony. Spring for the IMAX seats and you will feel that you are in Pharaoh’s palace, riding into battle and walking across the sea to freedom. A masterful interpretation of the familiar biblical story, the movie makes it clear, just how close Moses and Pharaoh were to each other. Moses was raised side by Exodus Director Ridley Scott strong, silent type, for much of the film. But, this is an action film and you can count on Ridley Scott to deliver action. The cinematography, the sets re-creating Memphis and Maria Valverde as Zipporah side with his cousin Ramses II, heir to the throne and he received the same princely education: both are generals in Pharaoh’s army as the film begins. This is honestly not the greatest script ever written, competent enough, but the dialogue is really a bit thin, requiring Bale to portray Moses as the the chariot chases are truly spectacular, contributing significantly to the overall enjoyable experience of the movie. As the movie opens, we are in 1300 BCE (Before The Common Era) at Pharaoh’s court in Memphis, the capital of Egypt. The Moses we meet is an agnostic, Christian Bale as Moses leads the Egyprions into battle who does not believe in Pharaoh’s gods -- or anyone else’s. He is a young, battle-hardened man. Ignorant of his Jewish heritage, Moses undergoes a powerful transformation as the movie progresses. Christian Bale plays Moses with the charisma and quiet self-assurance of a man born to lead: a commander capable of turning a rabble of slaves into a fighting force to be reckoned with; convincing them to follow him across the uncertain sea to avoid sure death at the hands of Pharaoh. Joel Edgarton plays Pharaoh Ramses II – born to the throne of Egypt – a competent enough general who still manages to get himself into a difficult situation that Moses gets him out of, fulfilling the prophecy of the high priestess about leadership. Pharaoh’s dying father, Seti, played by Yonkers John Turturro, ruefully admits that Moses would be the better successor but can do nothing about it. The script and Edgarton portray Joel Edgarton as Ramses Ramses as a man who faithfully practices the religion in which he was raised, and who, with great reluctance, realizes that he and Moses are on life paths that are diametrically opposed. Ramses struggles to understand the problems that confront his country and dimly senses that he is way out of his league when it comes to solving them. Ben Kingsley is Nun, who reveals Moses’s true lineage to him during Moses trip to Pithom, to inspect the slave precinct on behalf of Pharaoh. Sigourney Weaver, unrecognizable in black wig & eye makeup is Tuya, Ramses II evil mother, who suspects Moses will supplant her son and plots against him. Maria Valverde plays Zipporah, the pretty girl who persuades Moses to stop and rest in her village for a while, after he has been exiled from court. Ridley Scott has re-created the capital city of Memphis with opulent palace sets, palm trees and a grand promenade lined Joel Edgarton as Ramses and Christian Bale as Moses with stately figures of gods. There are panoramic views of Memphis, the surrounding countryside and the squalor of the slave sector at Pithom where the slaves are building the pyramids along with Ramses tomb. The battle scenes are fierce, with some harrowing chariot scenes and the series of plagues are truly awe-inspiring. This is a very entertaining movie. There are some gory battle scenes and lots of entrails being inspected before being offered to the gods but Ridley Scott has successfully captured and brought to life the bible story of Moses and the Exodus. Director: Ridley Scott; Cinematography: Dariusz Wolski; Distributed by 20th Century Fox. Running Time: 150 Min. MPAA Rating PG-13 for violence including battle sequences and intense images Page 16 THE WESTCHESTER GUARDIAN Thursday, DECEMBER 25, 2014 CALENDAR News & Notes From Northern Westchester By Mark Jeffers Open 10AM - 8PM Mon-Sat. Juice Bar • Smoothies • Salads Paninis • Rice Bowls Dine In -Take-Out • Dobbs Ferry Delivery 914.479.5555 MIXONMAINNY.com 63 MAIN ST., DOBBS FERRY, NY We hope everyone had a great Christmas; the Jeffers gang certainly did, and there was just one tiny piece of coal in my stocking! We opened so many wonderful presents, but still found time to write this week’s “Happy Holidays” edition of “News & Notes.” I wanted to get the word out on this; Michael Dellorso is now a student at Fox Lane High School. The 15-year-old Bedford Hills resident has been undergoing dialysis since October of 2013 at Montefiore Children’s Hospital and he’s hoping for a kidney donor. The initial donor criteria is someone with O positive blood type, in good health and under the age of 60. Anyone who is interested in learning more about being a potential donor should contact Jennifer Flood of Flood Sisters Kidney Foundation of America by emailing calling 646-7158976. She is working with Michael’s case manager at Montefiore Children’s Hospital to find a match. The Flood Sisters have had success in helping local residents connect for transplants through local & social media. See some of the area’s best high school basketball match-ups during the 16th annual Westchester County Slam Dunk Tournament, Friday through Monday, December 26 - 29, at the Westchester County Center in White Plains.The tournament will showcase 24 of the best boys’ and girls’ high school basketball teams in the area, featuring some of the most exciting play this high school basketball season. It’s quite the festive season in Peekskill during their citywide celebration, featuring a Polar Express Holiday Light Tour, family events throughout the month and even a New Year’s Eve ball drop. Speaking of the ball drop, don’t forget the White Plains New Year’s Eve Spectacular with live music and a big countdown to 2015… Congratulations goes out to thirteenyear Bedford Department veteran Melvin Padilla who was recently sworn-in as the force’s new interim chief, marking the first time an Hispanic person has been named police chief in Westchester County. Padilla was most recently a lieutenant with the department, and he will remain chief until the position is permanently filled in the spring of next year, he replaces retired Chief William Hayes. Are the kids tired of playing with their new gifts already? On December 26, 30, 31, Conductor Richard Milan Simons January 2 The Katonah Museum of Art is Simons will present New Year’s Day Gala offering a creative and fun events for kids. Concert at 3:00pm on Thursday, January 1st Teaching artists introduce a different project at the Holy Name of Mary Catholic Church each day, including kimono dolls, origami, in Croton-on-Hudson. The program will masks, and Japanese-inspired cards, children include favorite music by Strauss family as age 3 and up. well as popular American composers. Early arrivals can enjoy a pre-concert hour of I’m shivering just writing about this… join the brave souls at the Peekskill Riverfront Dixieland jazz by Simons Family Funtime Band. Green at 1:00pm on January 1st for the 3rd Annual Polar Plunge. Sponsored by The I hung up my clubs long ago, but did Quiet Man Public House, all proceeds from you know that the six Westchester Countythe Polar Plunge will go to the This is Me owned golf courses will close for the season Foundation, and specifically towards college after play on Sunday, January 4th. They will scholarships for local students who have remain open until that date, weather and faced adversity, or helped a friend through conditions permitting; check with the indiadversity, and students nationally who have vidual course. The courses are expected to alopecia. This event is open to the public to reopen in March, weather and conditions watch and encourage the brave plungers to permitting. jump in. The This Is Me Foundation was Don’t forget to make all your New Year’s created to raise awareness about alopecia, an resolutions, so we can break them together… auto-immune disease that causes hair loss, see you next week. while giving hope to any individual who Mark Jeffers resides in Bedford Hills, New York, faces adversity. with his wife Sarah, and three daughters, Kate, The Cortlandt Chamber Orchestra Amanda, and Claire. under direction of conductor Richard Milan WWW.WESTCHESTERGUARDIAN.COM
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